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Politics and It's Disconnects
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I was watching Miami TV coverage of the INS decision on "the boy"--they
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called it "Decision Day"--and, man, those local channels don't want to get
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nasty letters from any Cuban-Americans. I don't know if you can access any tape
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of this stuff, but the street reporters were moaning over the kid's lost
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opportunities. I'm not the first, nor will I be the last, to note that family
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values take a backseat to the chance at some stock options in the hearts of a
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lot of conservatives.
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While on the subject of (as the current lingo has it) disconnects, today's
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Boston Globe has an interesting story about McCain pressing the FCC to
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take a speedy vote on an application by a contributor to his campaign to buy a
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Pittsburgh TV station. Don't get me wrong, I'm not a fan of reform, living in
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California where half a century of reform has turned our politics into an
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insider's game. (The one reform that might work is free TV time, were not the
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broadcast lobby one of the strongest in Washington--for proof, see the
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Telecommunications Act of 1996.) But I note with glee that conservative
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defenders of the status quo argue a version of the old Jesse Unruh line about
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being able to take a man's money (to fully quote Jesse, "and eat his food, and
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drink his booze, and screw his women") and still vote against him--but, when
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the Heritage Foundation trots out its tabulation of how countries vote in the
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U.N. General Assembly, it cross-refs those votes with how much money the U.S.
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gives each country in foreign aid. So we should only expect votes to be well
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and truly bought when they're the votes of sovereign nations.
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I ascribe DiFi's lack of opposition to two things: assiduous courting of
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Silicon Valley, where major Republican contributors have lined up behind her,
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and, more important, the sad state of California's GOP. Grey Davis, the
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Democratic Governor, is triangulating like a Clinton, and it's giving the Reps
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fits.
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Mayor Riordan is a Republican, although one of those splendid reforms keeps
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that fact a secret from voters, and he's an amiable enough guy who has used his
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rhetorical and organizational muscle to force some changes--or at least rumors
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of changes--at the school board. But, like the Texas Governor, the Los Angeles
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Mayor is an executive office without a lot of power. He couldn't be a Giuliani
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if he wanted to. Plus, we have so few trains, and they don't go very far, so
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it's easy to make them run on time. Actually, the school system is in bad
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enough shape that there's major support behind breaking up the district, and
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the police force has a metastasizing scandal in one of its central-city
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stations (thousands of cases may have to be reopened, due to revelations that,
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yes, Alan Dershowitz is right, the cops do lie), so, aside from the weather and
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the economy, it's not all that golden. Riordan's term is up shortly, though,
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and, if he can lick statewide animosity toward L.A., he might be the
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Republicans' best hope for beating Davis, or Boxer, or Leno.
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